¨Get them (those) dirty dogs off my clean sofa!¨ Shouted Nana
The sentence "Don't walk on the clean floor with those dirty feet" is an imperative sentence because it gives a command or instruction, in this case, telling someone not to walk on the clean floor with dirty feet.
Ann's dirty hair, after she washed her hair, is now clean. Or - Ann's dirty hair, after a good shampooing, is now clean.
First of all to correct your English Grammar. The question should read 'What is the opposite of clean?'
The disheveled boy left his room dirty when told to clean.
I washed the dirty clothes until they were clean.
Yes. It means that the kitchen must be kept clean.If the kitchen is dirty, the phrase would be the kitchen needs to be cleaned, i.e. it needs cleaning.
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This sentence is not correct. You don't need the 'be' verb was. The dirty boy took a bath. This sentence is past simple. The dirty boy = subject took = verb - past tense of take bath = object
it is dirty
to clean dirty water it needs to be cleaned or filtered
one is clean and the other dirty??
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